Photo by Eran Finkle / Flickr
Jeff Talarigo’s third book, In the Cemetery of the Orange Trees (Etruscan Press, 2018), offers a compelling assessment of the collective psychological s…
Book Reviews
- Photo by jplenio / Pixabay“Acknowledging my illness,” writes Melyssa A. Harmon in Flecks of Red (Nautical Life Press, 2018), “allows me to take emotional ownership of all that comes with it w…
- Background photo by tsauquet / PixabayGenre is the most significant category in which books trade on the literary marketplace. Nonfiction or fiction. Memoir or novel. Literary fiction or romance, horr…
- Photo: Jarle VinesNorway is a country that shows up on the stage of Weltliteratur quite regularly. Henrik Ibsen had to live for more than two decades abroad to find the Archimedean point nece…
- Orientalism is over. The era of our culture, history, and image being constructed, codified, and represented by Western scholars is gone. Today we tell our own stories and are given voice by our own w…
- Aside from romance, horror is perhaps the least globally diverse genre of popular fiction by measure of the authors writing in or translated to English. While film seems to have no trouble making horr…
- Photo of Tracy K. Smith by Rachel Eliza GriffithsReading Wade in the Water (Graywolf Press, 2018), US Poet Laureate Tracy K. Smith’s fourth book, is an experience unlike any I’ve had bef…
- America has long been at the crossroads of accepting diversity and empire-building. American interactions with diverse peoples have often been less than ideal. During confusing, often unjust, dealings…
- Photo: Zakaria WakramTheologians may quarrel, but the mystics of the world speak the same language. – Meister EckhartWe live in unexemplary times, maddened by fear, murderou…
- Photo of Lea Goldberg and drawing by Goldberg from She’erit HaChayim (1971) / Courtesy of the Gnazim Institute, Hebrew Writers’ AssociationLea Goldberg (1911–1970), one of the most impor…
- Major Jackson / Photo courtesy of the author. Kehinde Wiley’s Morpheus (2008) appears on the cover of Roll DeepMajor Jackson’s latest book of poetry, Roll Deep (Norton,…
- Leïla Slimani / Photo courtesy of FrenchCulture.orgI have barely read any critical pieces on Leïla Slimani’s novel Chanson douce (Gallimard, 2016), winner of the prestigious Prix Goncourt in…
- Naomi Klein / Photo by Kourosh Keshiri“It is easier,” Mark Fisher writes in Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?, “to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalis…
- “A thing of beauty is a joy forever,” and our aim is to reach the unattainable, the unknown through the “viewless wings of Poesy.” “Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world,” thinks the R…
- Misuzu Kaneko (1903–1930) is a poet who holds a special place in the hearts of many Japanese as a voice of compassion in a difficult time for the country. The recently published Are You an Echo? T…
- Jonas Zdanys is a master lyricist. The bilingual poet (English and Lithuanian) displays his versatile ability with a variety of poetic styles in several recent collections. In Red Stones (201…
- Layli Long Soldier’s Whereas (Graywolf, 2017), a poetry finalist for the 2017 National Book Awards, contends with the U.S. federal terminologies in relationship to Indigenous people and reins…
- A still from Buñuel’s Un Chien AndalouThe word CAMERA never appears in my scripts. I don’t prepare. I never know what I’m going to do in the next scene.—Luis BuñuelSimply me…
- Mathias Énard / Photo © Marc Melki / Courtesy of New DirectionsThe quickest way to turn someone off from the possibility of reading Mathias Énard’s astounding novel, Compass (New Directions,…
- Biljana Obradović captures the immigrant’s distrust of the permanent in Incognito.Serbian American poet Biljana Obradović has lived in Yugoslavia, Greece, India, and in the US, where…
- Tanure Ojaide / Urhobo Historical SocietyTanure Ojaide seamlessly blends the personal with the political in this volume of verse to paint a compelling portrait of a Nigeria always in transition.…
- Poet John Kinsella inhabits and lends voice to the landscapes around him in Firebreaks. In Firebreaks (Norton, 2016), the title John Kinsella chooses for his twenty-third co…
- Samrat Upadhyay’s newest story collection offers political engagement shot through with humanism and hints of spirituality.Political unrest looms as large in Samrat Upadhyay’s newest collecti…
- Cardoso’s magnum opus offers a glimpse into the hidden world of postwar Brazil’s upper echelon.Editor’s note: When a publisher brings forth a much-needed translation of a class…
- Laurens explores the seductive danger of a digital fountain of youth in this novel about women’s identity and agency in midlife.Technology and gender standards collide in Camille Laurens’s ne…